vr.cz TWO
TL CZZCOII CTATrC:.LHI. Cclsra. Orecoa, Thursday MomL.-, Jsnusry 13. IZ'A
Hostile Senate
Starts Action :
On Labor Draft
' C (Continued from Page 1) C
-if 1 ...
I , tional service law would bring
-flittle i" compulsion" of labor be-
yond requiring worker to .stay
on job for which they had been
trained.
"It would be the enactment of
v; moral principle -that everyone
has always admitted the duty
of every citizen to contribute ac
cording to his ability,? the under -
secretary saia.
Green asserted -.that national
' service weald "amdcrmlne ear
basl concepts ef tfemocraey.'
declaring that .."there Is no real
i comparison between draftior
' men far serrlee 1st the armed
' forces ef the-ewuitry and draft-
' Ing them for service In private
' Industry, operating far private
profit."
He said Great Britain, operat
ing under a national service law,
experienced in 1942-a number of
strikes "greater ' proportionately
than in the United States.
xne prwiaem. put nauona sex-
vice legislation atop a five-point
m. . a a.
t stabilization programs yesterday
in nis message on uie siaie 01 uw
- union, and within, two hours Aus-I
- tin came into the senate with'
revision of a year-old bill.
The Vermont senator, steoned
'mto
TLX
hearing,
his bill would not : abrogate la
' bor's right to strike.;;
"The tiling that's causing all
this talk now is these strikes,'
Reynolds said after: the meeting.
"If this bill won't prevent strikes
then I don't understand it
Other senators contended the
Austin ' proposal would do the
ame thing as stopping strikes, f
s. jt"l a . .j j . ii I
nowever. unaer m Terms me
.-...uu.. vv.
to return to a strike-stilled in-
4.... it u . m I
to the war,
If the workers still refused re
placements could be recruited
from among other civilians, by
conscription if necessary,
Austin himself working, as he
said, "without one word" from
the White House told the com
mittee he would do nothing to
force the legislation through un
til he is convinced there is a pub
lic demand for it.
"This should not be a mandate
1UU snuu nui . manaate
zrom congress to tne neooie n i
said, he added, however, "that herTcSmans admitted losing
has evidence "considM m- I
nas . evidence "considerable seg
ments" of the population want a
national service act.:
Discussion .spread onto the
housej floor , .where a republican
and a democrat Joined in accusing
ii uioiucui ui. cmuns . at i
HlSrWi- tre,?B
2 SSILST-
er national service legislation Is
necessary to control it
Rep. Gifford (R-Mass),- first
made the. charge in a bitter de
nunciation of the prpposaL
Rep. Cox (D-Ga), interposed.
"This action (national service
legislation should have been tak
en a long time ago. The coddling
ef racketeers in labor now has
built a Frankenstein that has
frightened the president and the
country out of their boots
Struggle Over
Service rot&:
By WILLIAM T; PEACOCK
WASHINGTON, Jan. . 12-(JP)
Republicans today , tagged Presi-
t R,m:f: r
gresa, particularly the part ad-
..ii.-uiir.i
vawinat a ": vafuvas'. WklTI - . 9
Bomlc rights, as a fourth term
bid and., preview or the 1944 1
democratic platform; ' ' r I
Th,t m. tw . 1
GOP members in congress and al-
so of republican-national commit-
teemen going home after their 1
meeting in Chicago.
Rep. Martin of Massachusetts,
. the 'house republican leader, ob-
. aerveH that th-rMvKmit tWm -
sage the chief executive "never
xor a moment forgot that there is
n election aneao." I
Republicans
, the five pointe enunciated by the
president might be interpreted as
:: a campaign platform.
Irrespective of the president's
views on another ; term m the
believes the pre-war . program . of J
social changes which was called I
the "new deal-should be pressed!
again once the conflict is over. I
His bill of economic "rights pro-r I
lected a vast extension ef social I
- security; and governmenr aids and I
. assurances to, the indvidual. List-, j
erl mm hMerthmt wmi rirhta tn a I
useful ;nd remuneratice . job, to j
earn enough xor rood, clotnmg and
recreation, of farmers, t make a
fair profit b their crops, of busi
ness men to- be assured .of. fair,
competition, of a. decent home for
every lamHy, of adequate medical
care, of economic protection Id old
ase,; sickness and unemployment,
and to m good, education. - '
ReptJtllcans' viewed it as giving
a broad "t5UtXIae -JX- what' aort of
postwar dorsesiis program .'the
prcslisrt vaats " th democratic
convention ti endorse.-1
27t!i Carrier Launclied
. VAII CCTJVZZ, -.7asSL, Jan. 12
(7)- Tia , nuijard. Bay, 27th
' :-ociet -airerafi 'carrier , frcra
f ? Iliiier ' yard here," slid down j
1" 2 v.-rrs tdy," i3. hull sptachei
. ! r
,t
ONiheHOllEFROlIT
By t3AITL CXXILD3
"Listeners-in, It -seems, are not
eavesdroppers. " r
- In Salem,- two (iris- organiza
tions are- getting .together 'listening-in"
groups . to : hear Helen
JtB itar SaturdayJanuary 15.
in the first of a aeries of 13 radio
j you
programs entitled "Here to
-" Scheduled for broadcast on a
nationwide -hookup, it will be
heard here over KGW from 10 to
10:39 mjtL
. And more 'than the Campfire
girls and the younger girls' com
mittee of the YWCA should be
those t two groups, are helping to
pay for the ; aeries of : Saturday
half hours. '! :. . ' .
The YMCA. Boy Scouts. Junior
S1.H C'i NttonJ sCatooUc
fl ffj
of America, National Jewish Wel-
fare Bnarrl. National AssnHatinn
I
of Settlements and . the Girl Re-1
I f th YWCA and Camnfir
J girls are the sponsors.
.
r -
"Yanks Lose 64
I f
PlanesinlRaid.
Nazi Plants
G (Continued from Page 1) G
28 miles from Halberstadt, and
site of Krupp armaments factor
ies.
The bombers wera escorted to
their tareets bv clouds of Amer-
as
lean fighters: P-38- TJhtninM.
i . . i
p7 t Thunderbolts, and an un-
identified tvna -of "loM-raMe
. . . - : i
I sien of the P-51 Mustang.
"Opposition was strong and
there, were many fierce aerial
combats, said the communique.
Many of the returning bombers
were diverted to bases other than
.i
those from which they took off.
thus complicating the task of in
telligence officers in assembling
the communique data.
The communique specified that
the total of more than 100 Ger-
pianes ,hot down still was
.- .... i
no mora man nine xiEnis. i
.While high US officers labored
" . i
, lanua mix we
uuormauon mm toe raid. How
ever, returned fliers told of fierce
battles
!?S d!tM!liia2
.k..
"S whk Germans .fired
bombers from the
ground.' . v s:
The American blow was direct-
ed into tha verr hoar rt th rlK
Brunswick' is -120 miles west nf
Berlin. Oscharslebeii and Halhr-1
stadt are each about 100 milesl
southwest.
It was the farthest nenetration
ever made into German the
m: . . . I
ugnier escort. i was tne Zirst raia I
on Oscherrieben. HalhMt ...
last hit in 1940 by the RAF, which
visited Brunswick twice in 1941
and once last September.
Bank
Indicted
On nm
vul VC3 I
vnt;',';.. ...
WIVX, 1 -UfY 1U-
reputedly the largest
tnciair tni T
merciai oanklng House in the!
-T .:,Lf.r1r
" J . I
dustrial diamonds in v!liv. I
TZZ TTZTr -n
. LiL
enemy act I
?!! Jf todY by Att0me3r
. nn, .. -.. . . I
TOr7: " . . " . "" J
r7 w1!
?r.Jrr airec. J
rrJ IT. '
? a! iT w" LTnirdi
,2,."
"T. 7 . vwvu-1
2?'' - "'" controlled by Smit
To dealer pleaded innocent ot
arraignment here today and was
ir4"1 $500 baU for hearing
SOFaaxJ 1 - i 1
CC"J of aiding the transactions
bjr carrying i on regular hnn)t
creois transactions with El-
sanium ana other Smit firms, i
-Biddle said an immediate result
' the indictments would be "the
xlulun on or what is believed
to one of the worst leaks of
Strategic industrv
county to the enemy."
I
l
II . I &i?9 I
. CO- Ai Uif AJ.
Yanks Smear
JaP Sneak
Landing
K (Continued from Page 1) E
plete control of the western side
of Vitiaz strait I . , - '
Madang and Alexishafen, en
emy supply and airdrome centers
on the- New Guinea coast north
west of Saidor, were "again hit by
allied bombers, this, time with 128
tons "ot explosives. T ' ..'
Nearly 1100 "tons j have been
dropped on these bases so far this
month; a blasting comparable to
concentrating bombings in the
past which have presaged ; invas
ion. !; 5 J' t:M
Bombers ranging north of Ma
dang damaged shore installations,
Z Tl
ed shipping ..in the Uligan har
bor area. Destruction of 14 barg-
f our luggers and other small
fnti warn Trnsr4mA with trianv
L Z.r' . '
I ?j , pf.ip.fa,,, boat, ,nk
nine barges and damaged 11 oth-
ers'in night attacks off the coast
l i " . . j. . . ..
i nup v,inr Manv Arm immm
, JT-. .T
I caTod enemy troop.,, and their
presence Domerea Deuel max tne
Japanese were finding, their posl-
tion between Australian and
American f orces untenabU.'.i-i.iN
Air patrols smashed again at
nA rin nnrh . i tK.
! American line on Arawe penin-
sula, on the southwest coast of
New Britain and 65 miles from
Cape Gloucester. 's v'-jf'. ;
(A Tokyo broadcast picked up
by the NBC at New York sUting
Arawe was labeled by a MacAr-
thur headquarters spokesman ! as
"a ! complete exaggeration.": He
said -we are still right there and
TiuJiT- 5 , '-TT
(Arawe was occupied by i ele-1 .
7 . -J" 1 ZT-irz:
i menu ox me sixu armr iecem-
. Ahrmrt
? ' toJUvl enfn?a"ent!0n
zrom uie ivecemoer o mannt in-1
vasion at Cape Gloucester, ; The!
Americans captured the practte-
aiiy unserviceaoie susinp norm-
east or Arawe peninsula, but sub
sequently relinquished It to the
enemy and fell back to the- pen-
. TT
insuia.
Rabatd, the important Japan
ese base on northeast New; Brit
tain, was hit again by medium
bombers front the south Pacific
si ,ihhm infernal air.
nna nt hm thrM frAm
IZZX. ZZ- 7Za
t.. uuu ,
tPZLSZ
ique made no mention of enemy 1
. . i e t x
lnvrppniinn. ninELT .jauanss
n1inM v.v O- downed in allied
on Rabaul since January L
Marshalls Get
T T ' ? 7 :pJ
JNCW DamaffC
r ? V O .;,
lYm UAtnhnmi
MXMM. JLW UXAMJkJ M. &
' y UUM MlUiUN
tEARL HARBOR, Jan. 12 -iff)
New damage Jito enemy shipping.
P ground installaUons in
tne ; Marshall islands in a triple
a ffnlr Vw o rm, at niw)vunKMi
J J .
January 10 and 11 was announced
today by Pacific fleet headquart-
ers All our Manes returned mi
ers. All our planes returned tin-
damaged. '-!?; ;!"
Heaviest of the three blows was
that delivered yesterday by Lebi-
rator search planes of fleet wing
two against Kwajalein. In a dar
ing daylight attack, from low alti
tude they sank two small Japa
nese cargo ships " and damaged
Jour others, started fire, in build-
Inn and hnn InEtaHatinrta mnA
damaged two planes on the air-
f,Jd Thm r
Kwajalein I apparently is the
pnncipiI emy shipping center
in the nrarhan m .hinnt.-
OT damaged there
US raiders than in any of the
:. . : . ..
o"1" wu of the group.
other atolls f the group. The
tnral nnw 1 uv
now
cruisers, five small cargo ships and
nall transport : sunk and . 13
cargo ships damaged.
Heavy bombers of the Amerl-
can Seventh army air force strut
There were no details of this 20th
raid on Mfli. where the Nipponese
probably two
more to previous strikes against
a US' loss of three planes.
TODAY AND FSDAT
a "
teve-aiKl.
Ie-W?r
v Last Times Tonight
' to till I
H A I
HI Jrr) teve-and.!
Ii.,; " Co-reat2re.
irri jcra rt rr
Re-elected
CAPT. WALTER LANSING ;
iMnsihg Heads
State Employes
Til JW? TwTT.
MrO- 1 eriH
I frann rmnlMm ' Tnn' vulaa-
i - ,
ted Capt Walter Lansing of the
I ..tJ.tZZ- uT
I . 7r
recessive term Wednesday night;
.aru7a. ffT - . V wno .
v..i assistant to tne
f 'oresierA " vice president,
Aucics iina m m oepan-
ff1 ot donJ ecreta57 "
secretary - treasurer, was elected
to assist Miss Hanks.
Following his reelection, Lans
ing named to serve with officers
on the executive committee "Joe
:JL.?""
staff; Mrs. Bertha BergmaoL of
fice of the secretary of state; J.
, ,Lmft"
I culture, and Hershel W. David-
D. Patterson, department of agri-
I O . m
LSllfaO fikgh
-jw v w
m - 1 -m-
QX iUeOSUTe
WASHINGTON, Jan. - 12-JPi
The senate today approved most
of the important features of the
$2,278,600,000 tax increase bill,
completely disregarding President
Roosevelt's charge that it is not
a "realistic revenue measure. ;.
The members raced . through
hundreds of amendments recom-
mended by the 1
l
fi,
""
f . Technically, the bin remained
open for the -most basic changes,
but none was in sight and Fi
nance Chairman George (D-Ga),
said he knew of hone in prospect.
Majority j Leader Barkley and
Sen. Vandenberg (R-Mich)
tanking republican on jthe comJf
mittee, even, said that all the
principal revenue sections might
be considered as approved.
Elfstrom Awarded
Contract
Temporarily extending the
i ranffe of Aneratinna V man
VF OV kejr men..of
ttT"1, rpuzauon
!?01. IeaV Withm days for
Utah, where the paint, roofing
and floor covering contract has
just been awarded to "the local
concern. The work involves ini
tial units of a new housing pro
ject at Lark, Utah, 18 miles south
east of Salt Lake City.
i Ustrom. pointed out, that al
though this latest contract in some
aeTonet!
uon or nis local firm was very
gratifying and a tribute to the
workmen associated with him on
former occasions. t
OPENS i.-45 F.
nou snomns!
As Big
As All
OntdeorsI
Thrill
After
ThrClt
"Jean "Arthur v
William Holden
Warren WiEIara
;."iinizo:m" .
Plus , Two Farorite
Stars s Running Riot
In Romance .
w and Fun!
Lcretla Yonr
- Ildvyn Docslas
...HX3 STAYED FOP
Xr.HAIOJ'AGT-
.
Demo, Party
Leader Hints
Withdrawal
F (Continued from Page If F
est the results of a poll conduct
ed among them by the Associated
Press.. -'.. -
If - . v.--,-:-;- j ..... .. .
The Poll showed CtoV. Thomaa
E. Dewey of New York, who in
sists ' he is not a 1 candidate, and
Wendell I Willkie, the 11940 GOP
nominee who is expected by bis
supporters to announce his can
didacy formally in New York
within a few weeks, running neck
and neck. - with 21 - votes - each.
among the 82 committeemen and
women who voted. - f - . - -
There was a bur unknown
tity, r however. In 23. 'committee
members who said they were open-minded
on a - nominee. The
others voted this war: I
" Gov. John Wi Bricker of Ohio,
a; j. commander Harold E. Stas
sen, 4; Sen. Robert Taft of Ohio,
2; Gov. Dwight H. Green of Illi
nois, 2; Gov. Earl Warren of Cal
ifornia, 2: Gen. Douglas MacAr-
thur. i: Dewey or Willkie. L
Of the 106 committee; members,
o were contacted and asked to
write fthelr presidential nrefer.
ences on a blank slip of paper and
.si . as. i
arop it m a seaiea ooxJ only five
refused to -vote. j :
; The members were asked aim.
ply: "What man would you like
to see nominated by the republi-
can party?
I
Even while many of the renub-
licana were still here, including an
arrangements committee . group
that visited the big stadium where
their convention, will j be held.
Chairman Walker of the demo
crats arrived in tow with Vice
Chairman Ambrose O'Connell to
confer with Mayor Edward J.
Kelly and hotel men. i
Walker would not discuss re
ports of his impeding resignation,
but it was learned he planned to
give up the political post which he
never cherished in the first place
ana which he accented ; only as a
temporary job. . . j
Hannegan. who succeeded Guv
Helvering of Kansas as Internal
revenue ; commissioner several
months ago when Helvering went
on the federal bench, is a com
parative newcomer on the nation
al1 political scene. Others who
have been considered as Walker's
succesor are' George Ej Allen, ef
Mississippi, a Washington insur
ance executive, who now is na
tional committee secretary, and
David Kelly, national committee
member from Grand Forks, ND.
Sargent . Bashes Head
In Fall at Ice Rink
Russell Sargent. Grand Island..
who struck his head so severely
when he fell at the Salem ice
arena Wednesday night that he
lost consciousness, waaj dismissed
from Salem General hospital a
short time after city first aid men
had taken him there for examina
tion...;, . :! .....
HOU PLAYKG!
. . . It has the whole town
talking! You really
shouldn't miss it 1 1
canity. meua
Plns Hilariocs Fira!
ndly
Mary
t Erian ;
Warren
njmer
An3 in ths ITews!
-CONT. FROM I f. H. j
fUM
hKStSZKt
A m -7-;j. , - ,
' I tvririH ; '
n tsm .. ?.... i v ...
tisisssf
Do
1
Theaires :
$o Sponcor
'Bond Prevues
B (Continued from Page 1) ' DT
let Oregon also take the lead in
fullfilment of the. war bond quo
ta. Let Oregon live up to her no
ble traditions."
Gov. Snell, Secretary of , State
Farrell, State Treasurer Scott and
Chairman Sammons of the state
war. finance committee also spoke
at a meeting of representatives
from each department of state
government, at which, the cam
paign for bond sales among state
employes was outlined. Quotas for
he various . departments will be
announced later, : ': ''
Block wardens" 'attending
meeting at the Englewood school
called by Mrs.:; Lawrence Lister,
zone leader; pledged support' to
ward the goal of $110,000, neces
sary to sponsor , a Douglas ambu
lance plane ; which will .bear a
laame indicating that, it was'. fin
anced In Salem. 1 C
A meeting of solicitors in the
Mt Angel district has been called
for Friday night by ' James.; Four
nier, district! chairman.' Jesse J.
Card, county chairman, and other
workers from Salem will attend.
ML Angel's quota is $100,000, a
xigure wnicn that- district greatly
over - subscribed in the third
war loan. -: i
Reds Take
Sarny; Start
3 New Moves
D (Continued from Page 1) D
VatutuVs forces captured 50 towns
and hamlets- west of ' Novosrad
Volynskf. includina MuzhilovichL
miles from Novograd Vnlynski
and three miles from the highway
Junction of Korets. .
West and northwest of Klrovo-
grad, ; where! the Germans suf
fered one of their severest defeats
of the current ramnafra. Gen.
Ivan S. Konev s ! first Ukrainian
army dislodged: the Germans from
several heavuy fortified populat
ed places, killed 1000 of the ene
my and destroyed 36 of their tanks.
A Soviet motorized detachment
broke into the German rear, at
tacked an airfield and set fire to
40 arounded Dlanes. and routed
a German headquarters unit be
fore wheeling back to its own lines.
4 South of J Belaya Tserkov in
the Dnieper bend,: where Vatutin's
forces were nearest a junction
with Konevs army, the Russians
coptured several populated places.
Firemen Called
City, firemen were called to .170
South 15th streeT at 9:10 p. m.
Wednesday night when a chimney
fire was in ; progress there
OPENS C:45 P. M.
IIOUi FLAYCIG!
FUN AND ACTION!
;... -J.'.". 5 ... I .... .a i J1 V
- CO-FEATURE
STAnrin
ALMA !
CAfttOLL
. FINAL EPISODE OF
"JU-:3LS CTEL"
- - 1 ; - i- - ;
- . First Chapter
New! Exciting! l:
yTkrilUPccl&d ,
Serial!. . , " 'S
V m m m ii ii ni..
Eee it fxcra the start . - . Dont
miss cne rln'.e adventure of
Jinx I
Falkenbarg N
Bert . I
Gordon 7 S
- i
..- . . - II ii i.i I It
Cat
mmmm II lil
Americans y ; ' '
Take Gervaro,
Push Forward
XT (Continued from Page 1) 11
pounding every Jbot of nazi-held
ground with big ! guns for hours
before each advance.
-"The allies new: round-the-dosk
Balkan bombing team ' Flying
Fortresses by day, RAF Welling
tons by night shifted its assault
to the big Greek; port of Piraeus
after its shattering blow the prev
ious day at Sofia; capital "of Bul
garia. u
: Though handicapped . by poor
weather, 'the great American
bombers went in unerringly with
their Lightning fighter escort and
rained tons of bombs : on moles,
jetties, warehouses , and '. railway
facilities of the port which serves
Athens and through which' sup.
plies pass to German forces in the
Aegean. i .:
Fortress crewmen I said many
fires were "started in' the ; harbor
and that c warehouse blew up,
Thirty-eight nazi fighters chal
lenged the mission oyer southern
Greece, and in the swirling .fight
that ensued Fortress gunners shot
down five enemy planes and their
escorts -destroyed another three.
Seven American planes were lost.
.. As In thexaid on Sofia. the two
engined British Wellingtons then
swept in after dark and, guided
by fires set b7 i the Americans;
dumped another huge load of ex
plosives and incendiaries. The
Wellingtons, capable lof carrying
bomb loads almost equal to those
of the Fortresses, were' reported
to have started a least nine more
blazes In Piraeus -'and - to ; have
touched off one mammoth explo
sion. l - . ;.
(The' German DNB news agency
reported, as usual, that all allied
bombs landed in "densely popu
lated residential quarters' of .Pi
raeus and that military targets
were not damaged.) :;4v-H'v-'-
A broadcast by the Cairo radio
today reported i that: Bulgarian
government ministries were has
tily evacuating Sofia and that the
civilian population also was taking
to the country on a 1 large scale
since Monday's one-two smash at
the Bulgarian capital! The city's
industrial districts were said to
have been heavily damaged.
An allied communique on the
ground fighting in Italy said the
Fifth' army's advance continued.
!a great
m
Ml
r nllyJ
SPECDAL
. IN FAMOUS MAKE
IRREGULARS !
Once In a proverbial new moon cm opportunity to buy
hosiery, such as mis presents itself OTdinarily in -wartime
never. But men here it is. The only thine we can't
tell you is the maker's name. : i
I.
Finest lisle-lined wools: In "Hi-Lo" cnkle styles only.
Knitted in1 the authentic English ribs in solid colors in-'
dudtocj armyO. D. ctnd navy bloxdc. . i " i
Made to'seUlorSlXO pair.- -
".
6Sc - 2
Now
2. Hi-Lo anile stylss or Wdar bngths la light weight
usles or line rayons. . i .
Mada to sell for
Now eZJi.;
f - i" s iK '
M lia C:ra ci
was seized. H-.crr.y poc!:cts. cf re
sistance were cleaned up and our
front line straightened out."
Front dispatches told how Am
ericans troops cleaned out a nazi
pocket i of resistance about 809
yards north, of Mount di Pi peri a,
which is north of Cervaro, . while
farther west other- Yank forces
engaged in a bitter struggle for
possession of Mount Capraro, a
2000-foot elevaiton about a mile
northeast of Carvraro. Another
Fifth army unit . occupied 'Mount
CicerelH, a ridge parallel to the
Via Cassilina south of Cervraro.
Arnold Says i
Germans Back
OnHeels
I (Continued from Page 1) I
against " the production capacities
of German factories, nazi efforts
to double their fighter strength
might : have succeeded with the
result that the difficulties which
mil art fa 'AVttfAma) hvi aallltfwl 'amis
attacks and also by amphibious,
landing forces would be incal
culably Increased. :
Commenting on the losses suf
fered by . our forces, Arnold as
serted "you can't measure losses
by any yardstick. War is most un
economical, but with our produc
tion, the loss of ten planes might
not be as serious to us as the loss
6f one plane to the enemy." !
Keith Brown
. . . . . .. i -
Wins Contract
"J (Continued from Page 1) J
ing Supply company contract will
be started as soon as the changes
in equipment necessitated by . its
specifications can be made, it was
announced Wednesday. ,
. The last large contract under
taken at the plant .was completed i
about three months ago and only
minor activity has been under way
there in the interim.
Though materials for the : bar
racks will r come fromV various
parts ot the country, Willamette
valley-sawed lumber will be used.
t is understood. ' '
1
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IZa and CZc pair.
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416 '- a T -
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